The almond trees throughout Spain are already in bloom and that is fantastic news for the sector. Or also a disaster

40 years ago, on January 10, the father of Simplisíssimus told him it would be a bad year for the almond. The reason was simple: when the trees flowered early, the almond embryo was exposed (“weak and sensitive”) to late frosts that could destroy entire crops. Therefore, the good time for flowering was March, he explained. And he must have been right, but in the last 44 years it has been increasingly difficult to prove it. According to an article published by AEMETSince 1981, the flowering of the almond tree has been advancing systematically and documented throughout the country. But it seems that, at least in some areas, this has changed this year. If confirmed, it could be good news. When do almond trees bloom? According to the work of the Autonomous University of Madrid, the Senckenberg Research Institute and AEMETin these 40 years, the median flowering date in the center of the peninsula has moved from February 12 to February 7. Of course, the progress has not been linear: it has accelerated in recent years. At a historical level, the most advanced in recent decades was in 1993 (around January 8). And why should we care? In general terms, because the almond tree is the most extensive woody crop in Spain and, in fact, it is growing: in the last decade the dedicated area has grown by 34%. The almendril madness in the country is such that, well, Spain leads the sector with 765,000 hectares productive. That is, it is an issue that matters to us as a country. So, we’re talking about good news, right? It will depend on how the weather goes from now on and, furthermore, we must not forget that It has not been like this in all places. However, as has been happening lately in the field, it can be (at the same time) good news and bad news. Good because a big harvest would help remove volatility that the almond has had in recent years, because it would help generate rural employment in a year which is expected to be complicated by flooding and will give a break to agricultural insurance. And yet, a good harvest can end up delaying a fundamental debate: that of varieties. The only way the sector has adapt to climate changes is betting on late or hyperlate variants. They are not a magic solution, but it is a solution. The question is whether the global almond giant, up to its eyeballs in debt, will understand that it has to make a move. Image | Tim Mossholder In Xataka | An end of February with 20 ºC, haze and full reservoirs is not “good weather”: it is the sign of a completely misplaced meteorology

This is the almond dam

Spain has 1,226 Dams for its geography. Or had them, since the last 20 years More than 100 have demolished. The objective is that the rivers return to their channels and the truth is that the majority of demolished dams were small, they did not fulfill their functions and They weren’t in operation. Of those that are still standing, the most imposing is between Salamanca and Zamora. This is the almond dama concrete giant that is not only the highest dam in Spain, but an intelligent electric battery. Concrete mole. Located on the Tormes River in Salamanca, Almendra’s is a colossal wall of 202 meters high and 567 meters long. Its construction was carried out between 1964 and 1970 and it was necessary to make an excavation at the height: 1.5 million cubic meters to house both the construction and the 8,650 hectares that would be covered by water. HE esteem that more than 2,400,000 cubic meters of concrete for its construction were used, being one of the most pharaonic works in the country, and with a cost that is difficult to determine. Between 4,000 million pesetas and 10,000 million, according to The newspapers of the time, which adjusted to inflation would be between 312 and 780 million euros. A straw in the Duero. The dam is of a vault type with double curvature and two side dikes that, if we include them in the dimensions of the “wall”, add up to a length of 3.5 kilometers. But a dam is much more than what is seen with the naked eye, and something fundamental in Almendra’s is the tube that connects with the Duero and with the hydroelectric power plant. It is a pressure gallery with a length of 15 kilometers and a diameter of 7.5 meters that was excavated in the rock and covered by more concrete. Towards the end, it is divided into two galleries five meters in diameter and, each, in two other 2.8 meters to increase water pressure. This gallery saves a 30 -meter unevenness and is the one that carries the water from the turbine reservoir of its associated hydroelectric plant, Villarino. Each group contains six turbines Francis r They work in a double way: they revolve to produce electricity, but they can also do it on the contrary to pump water. They can move 232,000 liters per second and is key to feedback with another large close reservoir: that of Aldeadávila in El Duero. Thus, Almendra’s is like a great reserve to contain the Duero in its floods, but it also supplies it in times of more drought. Leading the European Top-10. To put in context its importance, although compared to the rest of Spanish damsAlmendra’s is colossal, if we put the eye in Europe … it is not so much. Switzerland takes the palm in this regard, with dams such as Great Dixence 285 meters high. Georgia has that of Unguri with 271 meters high, but beyond that pair and two other Swiss dams (Mauvoisin and Luzzone), the rest of the list of the highest is starring Spanish dams. Almendra’s is fifth at European level and is followed by channels with 156 meters, Canelles With 151 meters, the As wells With its 141 meters, the Aldeadávila with 139 meters and that of Barasona With a height of 133 meters. An ocean. Although it is huge, its capacity is not the largest in the country. It doesn’t even come. Its reservoir has a capacity of more than 2,600 cubic hectometers, far from the 3,162 h3 of the Alcántara dam in Cáceres or the 3,220 h3 of the La Serena dam in Badajoz, which is not only the largest reservoir in Spain, but the third largest in Europe. And, like other reservoirs, Almendra’s allows the development of recreational activities, with hiking routes or maritime activities such as expeditions in kayak. But it is evident that the most important role of the dam is not to create an ocean in the middle of Castilla y León, but to generate electricity. Not so striking production. The huge turbines we described some lines allow the installed power of the plant to be 810 MW, which implies an annual production of more than 1,300 GWh. It is one of the dams that help Castilla y León be one of the communities with More installed power In renewable energies, but the years do not pass in vain and there are prey that are much more striking than those of Almendra in this area. With an installed power of 1,720 MW, that of Cortes-La Muela in Valencia has an annual production of more than 1,600 GWh. That of José María Oriol-Alcántara II In Cáceres it has 915 MW and a production of 1,750 GWh and that of Aldeadávila in Salamanca, with an installed power of 1.139 MW, it has an estimated production of 2,400 GWh per year. And there are already projects As a consecut II In Ourense with a power of 1,800 MW that will allow up to 4,000 GWh per year or the planned of Llumaigua in Tarragona that will have the whop of 3,124 MW with productions of between 4,160 GWh and 7,000 GWh, something that still is in the air. Demographic impact. But of course, next to the rivers there are usually peoples and, with 8,500 hectares of surface, it is evident that the reservoir took some ahead. The beginning of construction was an economic bubble for Villarino de los Aires and Almond. HE They built Villages to house workers and the population peak because it was evident. In 1970, Almendra had 807 registered inhabitants, Villarino had 2,130 registered. Both locations came from decades of gradual depopulation, so the dam meant an unusual demographic rebound. In 2024, Almendra had 130 inhabitants and Villarino of the air with 739, and in both cases, just after completing the work, the population reached the level prior to it, which has also been decreasing aggravated with the rural depopulation of … Read more

Spain is the second largest almond producer in the world. There are tariffs or farmers, farmers are already in trouble

The world has entered an impasses. Except for the particular battle between the US and Chinathe rest of the planet is entering a period of calm and uncertainty that will last approximately three months in response to the sui generis Peace flag that Trump raised a few hours ago. Today von der Leyen has announced that the EU also pause the tariffs for 90 days to give “a chance to negotiations.” The problem is that this truce is far from being a return to “normality” and dozens of sectors They are preparing For what can happen. With the enormous problems that can generate: we talk about almond How did the European response work to Trump’s challenge? But, before that, let’s do some memory. On Tuesday, April 8, the European Commission presented its plan to impose tariffs on more than 1,500 US products. Once approved by the 27 Member States, the plan consists of three phases. In the first two (between April 15 and May 16), almost all of those tariffs would come into force. But there were certain products (such as soybeans and almonds) that They would not be affected until September 1. That is why almond is a key product to understand what happens. Or, being more specific, to see the distortions than the simple possibility that tariffs end up entering into force. Because as soon as the Plan’s phases the Coordinator of Agricultural and Livestock Organizations Coordinator He came up denouncing The “the great distortion that the national almond market will experience by postponing tariffs.” Do not forget that Spain is The second world producer of almond. The first, with much difference, is the United States. In the case at hand, the delay of the tariffs “will encourage importers to advance their purchases of Californian almond, causing a sense of excess supply in the domestic market, which will serve as a crop broth for speculation and to press down the prices that our producers perceive.” It will be necessary to see how the campaign of this rainy year evolves, but the problems of almond producers have been the same as those of the olive. That means that if the price collapses, many drying farms will have a really bad time. The tariff delay is, as the COAG defined it“a perfect trap.” 90 days to prepare for the worst. And that means what happens with the almond can happen with many other products. In recent weeks we have seen, for example, the Wine Importers Alliance in the United States (USWTA) recommended “Sorted to US companies that suspend all the shipments of wine, liquors and beer from the EU. “That has happened with many other products: the ‘cancellations’ They have been constant. And this 90 -day truce is the perfect excuse to collect generating distortions in the normal functioning of raw material markets that, without a doubt, will give us some scares. Image | TIM MOSSHOLDER | Michael In Xataka | Right now there are thousands and thousands of tons of olive oil embarking on the United States

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